marketing - Garnet Valley
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Transcript marketing - Garnet Valley
1
CHAPTER
4
THE BASICS
OF MARKETING
4-1 Changes in Today’s Marketing
4-2 Planning a Marketing Strategy
4-3 Deciphering Consumers and
Competitors
4-4 The Varied Role of Marketing
Chapter 4
MARKETING
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©VISA
Focus Questions:
What do you think is meant
by the ad’s headline?
Chapter 4
MARKETING
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©VISA
Focus Questions:
What do you think is meant
by the ad’s headline?
What role does Visa play in
helping businesses market
products and services to
customers?
Chapter 4
MARKETING
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©VISA
Focus Questions:
What do you think is meant
by the ad’s headline?
What role does Visa play in
helping businesses market
products and services to
customers?
How do credit and financial
services such as the ones
described in this ad make it
easier for businesses to
participate in international
commerce?
Chapter 4
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4-1
CHANGES IN
TODAY’S MARKETING
GOALS
Explain how marketing today differs
from marketing in the past.
Show why understanding customers is
crucial to applying the marketing
concept.
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CHAPTER
4
•
•
THE BASICS
OF MARKETING
Newsline page 88
Marketing Matters page 90
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Marketing Has Changed
Marketing Experiences
Understanding the Differences
From few to many
From independence to integration
From problems to opportunities
From expense to investment
Chapter 4
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Marketing Has Changed
Marketing Experiences
Define Marketing
Chapter 4
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Marketing Has Changed
Understanding the Differences
From few to many
From independence to integration
From problems to opportunities
From expense to investment
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Marketing Has Changed
Understanding the Differences
From few to many
Marketing has expanded in scope
Began to move product from the producer to
consumer (distribution)
Then evolved into promotion and sales
Now, all 9 functions are used
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Marketing Has Changed
Understanding the Differences
From independence to integration
Marketers worked alone (Mr. Incredible)
Planning for marketing was done after other business
planning was completed…after thought
Now, it is integrated- meaning it is an essential part of
the business
It is involved in all important business decisions, and
strategies are developed as a part of the business plan
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Marketing Has Changed
Understanding the Differences
From problems to opportunities
Marketing used to be handled as a problemsolving tool, now it is a creation tool
Also, it is often called on when companies face
problems….inventory, competitors
Today’s businesses can’t afford to wait until
problems occur, so they are continuously
looking for market opportunities
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Marketing Has Changed
Understanding the Differences
From problems to opportunities
Marketing Opportunities
Ways to improve a companies offerings in current
markets
It is responsible for identifying and planning
opportunities
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Marketing Has Changed
Understanding the Differences
From expense to investment
Old days Marketing was viewed as an
EXPENSE and was the first place to cut
Today it is a critical investment because it is
responsible for matching a company’s offerings
with market needs.
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What Does Marketing Marketing
Mean to a Business?
Reliable Auto Service
Dee’s Designs
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Activity 1
Pinpointing Promotion page 92
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Activity 2
Choose one U.S. Company that has been in
existence for at least 20 years such as
McDonalds. Locate old ads from the
company and compare those ads with
marketing ads the company uses today.
Create a presentation comparing the old vs
the new.
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4-2
PLANNING A
MARKETING STRATEGY
GOALS
Understand how the marketing concept
transforms business planning.
Explain the importance of market segments and market opportunity analysis.
Discuss how businesses develop the
right marketing mix.
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Putting Marketing Up Front
Successful businesses use carefully prepared
plans to guide their operations
Planning that identifies how a company
expects to achieve its goals is known as a
strategy.
A business’s strategy provides the clearest
indication of whether that business
understands the marketing concept.
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Putting Marketing Up Front
How Does the Marketing Concept Affect Planning?
Without the Marketing Concept
With the Marketing Concept
•
• Conduct research to identify
potential customers and their needs
Develop a Product
• Decide on marketing activities
• Develop a marketing mix (4Ps)
that meets specific customer
needs.
• Identify potential customers
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Putting Marketing Up Front
By incorporating the marketing concept
companies attempt to develop products and
services that respond to customers’ needs
rather than what the company thinks should
be offered.
Marketing will be directed at meeting the
identified needs of the customers rather than
developing ways to persuade people to buy
something they may not need.
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Understanding the Customer
Customers have many choices of products
They often spend time comparing products
and services before making decisions
Bringing a new product to the market is
expensive, it take time and money to develop,
produce, distribute, and promote
When it enters the market it must compete
with other companies
This competition among products is very intense
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Understanding the Customer
Identifying customer needs
Successful companies are usually those that meet
customer needs
But, meeting customer needs is not easy
Many customers are not sure of their needs, or
have conflicting needs
Customers have many needs, they typically have
limited amounts of money available
Needs of individuals and groups can be different
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Two Views of Consumers
Customers are all alike and can be
influenced to buy what a business
offers.
Customers are quite different and they
select products and services to meet
their unique needs.
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Understanding the Customer
Businesses tend to deal with customers in
two ways
1. Some businesses don’t view the specific needs
of customers as important.
Business feel most consumers are similar in terms of
their needs and purchase behavior
They believe either consumers don’t understand their
own needs or business can influence consumer needs
with well-designed products, pricing and promotion.
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Understanding the Customer
Businesses tend to deal with customers in
two ways
2. Understanding customers is an important part of
business activities
Study needs and try to understand how consumers
evaluate products and services to make decisions about
what to purchase
They feel they can better satisfy consumers if they can
develop products and services that respond to what the
consumer wants and expects
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Understanding the Customer
Satisfying customer needs
Businesses study markets to identify groups of
consumers with unsatisfied needs
Through extensive marketing research, the
business gather and analyzes consumer
information
It categorizes customers according to similar
characteristics, needs, and purchasing behavior
Groups of similar markets are known as market
segments
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Understanding the Customer
Satisfying customer needs
After distinct market segments have been
identified, a business will analyze each of them
It tries to determine which market segments can
be served most effectively and which have the
strongest needs, the most resources, and the
least competition
Studying and prioritizing market segments to locate
the best potential based on demand and competition
is know as market opportunity analysis
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Understanding the Customer
Satisfying customer needs
Once segments have been identified and
prioritized, the business selects those segments on
which it will focus its efforts
The segments selected become the business’s
target market
Target Market is clearly defined segment of the
market to which a business want to appeal
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Planning the Offering
The marketing mix
Creating the right mix
Developing products
Making distribution decisions
Pricing products and services
Planning promotion
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Combining Parts of
the Marketing Mix
Product that offers choices
Distribution that provides
convenience
Price that gives value
Promotion that aids
decision-making
Satisfied customers
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4-3
UNDERSTANDING
CONSUMERS AND COMPETITORS
GOALS
Detail the stages of consumer decision
making.
Understand how business can use the
marketing concept in various types of
competition.
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Consumer Decision Making
Consumers make decision every day
Decision is a choice among alternatives
Made to satisfy a need or to solve a problem
Consumers want to choose the alternatives
that provide us the most satisfaction or the
greatest value
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Consumer Decision Making
If marketers want to satisfy customer needs,
they must understand how consumers
choose what they will buy
Different theories are made, but there is a
general agreement that people follow a
series of decision making when purchasing
These decisions become routine and simple
when repeated
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Consumer Decision-Making Stages
Consumers make a series of decisions
when deciding on a purchase.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Recognize a need
Identify alternatives
Evaluate choices
Make a decision
Assess satisfaction
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Consumer Decision Making
The stages of a decision
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Recognize
Identify
Evaluate
Decide
Assess
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The Stages of a Decision
Recognize - Begins when a consumer
recognizes that a need exists
If the need is urgent the process is quick
If not, then the consumer may take time before
buying
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The Stages of a Decision
Identify - When the consumer becomes
interested in finding a solution
Identifying products or services that relate to the
need
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The Stages of a Decision
Evaluate - When the consumer gathers
information and uses it to evaluate choices
An evaluation is done to see if any choice is
better, more available, or more affordable
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The Stages of a Decision
Decide - When the consumer is comfortable
with the evaluation, a decision is made
Decision will be to select one of the available
choices, to gather more information, or to do
nothing
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The Stages of a Decision
Assess - When the consumer determines
whether or not the choice was correct
Evaluated to see if it satisfied the need
If it did the decision will likely be repeated the
next time
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Relying on Information
Marketers are creative. Creativity is needed
to plan the marketing mix, develop new
product features and uses, and prepare
promotional materials and activities
Conducting research is an important
marketing activity
Need to be skilled in organizing research and
using results
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Relying on Information
Most important part of research is the
study of potential and current
customers
Additionally, the research about
competitors will identify the type of
competition and strengths and
weaknesses of competing companies
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Responding to Competition
Intense competition
Limited competition
Monopolistic competition
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Responding to Competition
Intense competition
Most difficulty type of competition
businesses face is market in which
businesses compete with others offering
very similar products
Ex- Pure competition…many business
offering the same product (Agricultural)
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Responding to Competition
Limited competition
Some businesses have the advantage of
having little or no direct competition
Ex- Known as a monopoly
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Responding to Competition
Monopolistic competition
Most business face competition
somewhere between intense and monopoly
They have many competitors, but
customers see differences among choices
The customers determine which product fits
there wants and needs
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4-4
THE VARIED
ROLE MARKETING
GOALS
Explain how the role of marketing differs
in various types of businesses.
Identify ways marketing is used by nonbusiness organizations.
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The Varied Uses of Marketing
Producers and manufacturers
Channel members
Service businesses
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The Varied Uses of Marketing
Producers and manufacturers
They develop the products and services
needed by other businesses and
consumers
Because of that role, the product part
element of the marketing mix receives the
most attention
Distribution is also important to insure the
product gets to the customers
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The Varied Uses of Marketing
Producers and manufacturers
Unless manufacturers and producers distribute products
directly to the users, they must rely on other businesses
to make good decisions about product distribution,
prices, and promotion
Even if producers and manufacturers do not sell directly
to final consumers, they still must understand and
respond to customers needs
EX- Nike shoes, sold by Nike, but also sold by stores like Finish Line,
Champs, Sports Authority
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The Varied Uses of Marketing
Channel members
A channel of distribution is made up of all the
businesses involved in completing marketing
activities as products move from the producer to the
consumer
Channel Members- are the businesses used to
provide many of the marketing functions during the
distribution process.
If the product does not meet the customers needs,
the customers are likely to hold the channel
member as responsible as the producer
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The Varied Uses of Marketing
Channel members
After decisions are made about what
products to offer, channel members then
focus their attention on the other mix
elements
Retailers are responsible for most final
pricing decisions
They use promotion activities to
encourage consumers to purchase their
products
MARKETING
Chapter
4
Channel of Distribution
Each is a
Channel
Member
WHOLESALER
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The Varied Uses of Marketing
Service businesses
Most service businesses work directly with
customers rather than through a channel of
distribution
Therefore they are responsible for the
entire marketing mix
Product mix element is very important- they
must develop procedures to insure quality
service every time
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The Varied Uses of Marketing
Service businesses
Distribution is also important- because the
service must be available where and when
the customer wants it
Service businesses have more control over
pricing
It is more difficult for customer to determine
the appropriate price
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Non-Business Organizations
Primary focus is on something other than providing
products and service for a profit
It is not unusual today to see marketing used by
museums, libraries, symphonies, athletic teams,
churches, and clubs
Examples
Government agencies
Churches
Schools
Museums
Professional organizations
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Marketing By
Non-Business Organizations
Government agencies
Nonprofit organizations
Supporting non-business organizations
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Marketing By
Non-Business Organizations
Government agencies
Most have the characteristics of a monopoly
Citizens pay for firemen, policemen, garbage collection,
street repairs, and other taxes
As a result they have no choice but to pay
In the past these agencies did not know what was best and
how to provide it, they just set the price
Now, they recognize the importance of providing quality
services and have information available in more convenient
ways, an example is:
E-government-info available on web
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Marketing By
Non-Business Organizations
Nonprofit organizations
Do not operate off of profit motive,
however still need resources to provide the
services
They often rely on fundraising
Must convince people of the value of their
service, and the need to support the
organization
Chapter 4
MARKETING